How to cultivate a desire for God’s Word: An interview with Christine Hoover

By Christine Hoover

We all know it’s best to be in the Bible regularly, but … life. We love these honest and challenging thoughts from Christine Hoover on making time in the Word a priority.

What’s your regular routine for Bible study? How do you make time for Bible study?

I get up at 6 a.m. every morning (except for one morning a week), pour a cup of coffee and sit down on the couch to read my Bible and to journal. I typically read through the books of the Bible one at a time. I go from creating outlines to writing notes on what I’ve read to writing out prayers.

This has become a necessity in my life.

But for many of my adult years, studying the Bible was neither consistent nor a felt necessity. I wanted to want to do it, but I struggled with motivation and desire. For most of my Christian life, I approached God and my Bible from a legalistic perspective. Basically, I checked studying off the list as what a “good” Christian does. However, that perspective removes any semblance of relationship and joy from reading God’s Word, so it’s no wonder I struggled to do it consistently.

Then, two things changed it all for me.

First, I came to understand the gospel more clearly. I learned that I am not practicing spiritual disciplines in order to get something from God, such as His approval or His movement. Because of what Christ has done for me, I’m a loved daughter. I’m practicing spiritual disciplines to make myself available to Him, because I can only hear, know and understand Him as He reveals Himself to me through His Word.

I also recognized that the gospel is not something that comes naturally to me. It must be externally proclaimed to me over and over again. I go to Scripture daily for reminders and to reset around the gospel. When that became the undercurrent of motivation, I was sparked to spend more consistent time in the Word.

The second thing that altered how I approached Scripture was a personal trial. I was rocked, and I felt an overwhelming need for an anchor. I knew my anchor was Christ, and as I searched for hope in the Word and consistently found it, I began craving it like I never had before.

It occurred when my children were small. I recognized pretty quickly that if I was going to have consistent reading time, I would have to get up earlier than them. This was a huge obstacle for me, because I love my sleep. But a few things helped.

One, I invited my husband to get up early with me, and he did. It’s become our routine. We don’t even think twice about it now. Two, I began associating certain things with that time: warm coffee, a special place in the house, cozy slippers, a cute journal and pen. It sounds silly, but sometimes that was what got me out of bed, especially in the winter. Finally—and this is so important—I trained my children to stay in their rooms until a certain time. Now that they are getting older, they are invited to join my husband and me in the living room for quiet Bible reading if they want. Otherwise, they remain in their rooms so I can have an hour of uninterrupted study time every day.

How do you personally cultivate a desire to be in the Word?

By just doing it.

Over time, I’ve seen the fruit in my life of consistently studying God’s Word. So, when I’m tempted to do it just for the sake of doing it or feel it is growing stale, I recall the benefits it brings to a believer’s life. The fruit of reading Scripture is not immediate, but Psalm 1 tells us that a person who consistently meditates on Scripture will be like a tree planted by rivers of water that brings forth fruit in its season.

Knowing that, I don’t want to give up. I don’t want to neglect what can produce that kind of fruit.

I think reading the Bible is often like a training drill, like a practice run for faith. For instance, we read often in Scripture about trials and suffering. We’re told how to respond when it comes. Reading Scripture is preparation in advance, storing up for what we need later. The fruit of studying Scripture is that our hearts and minds immediately go to its truth when suffering comes.

What has been your driest time spiritually, and how did you overcome that period?

There are many times when I read Scripture and finish without a personal application or a sense of having heard from the Lord. There are periods of time when He seems silent. There are also times when I’m reading a specific book of the Bible and I either have no idea what’s going on or I am struggling to connect with it. Those all feel like dry times to me.

Most of the time, I just continue doing what I’m doing. I think of opening my Bible as opening a door to God. It’s saying to Him, “Here I am. I’m submitting myself to You by submitting myself to the Word. Do with me what You want.” My job isn’t to “feel” something or try to force God’s hand. I don’t have to be afraid that I’m not going to hear or that I’m missing something.

My role is simply to be faithful to open that door.

What resources have influenced you the most in giving you a desire and tools for dwelling in the Word? 

Once, I heard Louie Giglio say that if you don’t know where to start, start in the Psalms. Read one per day and, in reading that Psalm, look for the character and nature of God.

For example, it often says in the Psalms that God is our refuge. Louie said that once you find that characteristic, think about it. What does it mean that God is our refuge? Finally, talk to God Himself about that characteristic. Thank Him for it. Ask Him to show you how He is like that in your life.

Louie’s perspective helped me understand that Bible reading is not about me but it’s about knowing God.

I also love Jen Wilkin’s resources for studying the Bible. She has a fabulous book out about how to study Scripture called Women of the Word, but my favorite resources of hers are her Bible studies that she has made available online. I’ve done several of them, and they have been so helpful in helping me dig into Scripture.

Any recommendations for Scripture memory? Meditation?

Memorizing Scripture is another one of those spiritual disciplines that is difficult to consistently practice but once you do, you see such benefit and fruit in your life. I highly recommend checking out Dr. Andrew Davis’ plan for extended Scripture memory. I’ve used his method to memorize large chunks of Scripture. It’s not as difficult as it sounds.

The most difficult part is committing to it and making it a habit.

The most helpful tools for me with Scripture memorization are accountability and choosing the right time to work on it. If someone is memorizing alongside me and will check in with me, that’s a great motivator. But I also have found that there are chunks in my days that are perfect for memory work and would otherwise be wasted. For me, those times are when I’m getting ready in the morning or driving to pick-up my kids from school in the afternoons. I make it a habit to use those times for Scripture memory.

This post was first published here.


Published July 31, 2017

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Christine Hoover

Christine Hoover is a pastor’s wife, mom to three energetic boys, and the author of The Church Planting Wife: Help and Hope for Her Heart. She enjoys encouraging ministry wives and helping women apply the gift of God’s grace to their daily lives. Christine’s work has been featured on Desiring God, The Gospel Coalition, Christianity Today, Pastors.com, Flourish, and In(courage). She offers fresh doses of biblical truth and grace on her blog, www.GraceCoversMe.com.